A French school, another Australian school, and a school sponsored by a group of state schools are among five new charter schools announced today.
The announcement brings the total number of charter schools opening next year to six.
The schools include two aimed at disengaged students - Christchurch North College, a middle school for children in Y7-10, and in Auckland the Busy School, for students in Y11-13 and part of an Australian chain of schools.
Auckland also gets the Ecole Francaise Internationale which would provide a curriculum approved by the French government, and North West Creative Arts College, a secondary school with a focus on the creative arts.
The fifth school announced today was Te Rito, Te Kura Taiao, providing immersion education in te re Māori in Kaitaia.
Christchurch North College was sponsored by the Christchurch Education Trust which was run by a group of principals from schools in northwest Christchurch including Papanui High School, Burnside High School, Casebrook Intermediate and Cobham Intermediate.
"Our goal is to re-engage young people with learning through a combination of small class sizes, highly skilled teachers, and strong partnerships with families and whānau," the trust said in a statement.
It said it would provide its students with uniforms, stationery, access to technology, and meals in order to reduce barriers to their learning.
The Ecole Francaise Internationale Auckland would enrol primary and secondary school students and offer an Agency for French Education Abroad-accredited education.
"This school is ideal for French families who wish for their children to continue their education in French. It would also improve the recruitment powers of New Zealand companies for French workers and the ability for French companies to establish workforces in New Zealand by reducing disruptions to French education," the school said.
Also in Auckland would be the BUSY School NZ, an outpost of an Australian chain of nine schools.
The school said it would provide disengaged teenagers with the national curriculum and a vocational curriculum based on their chosen career path.
North West Creative Arts College would enrol Auckland students in Years 7-13 and teach the New Zealand Curriculum alongside a creative art of their choice.
"The college will ensure there is a strong pastoral care programme for students. There will also be a strong focus on community outreach with students involved in community-based projects, helping them build connections," it said.
Te Rito, Te Kura Taiao would open in Kaitaia next year, providing immersion in reo Māori for primary school children.
It would be run by Te Rito Limited which already has three early childhood education centres in the area.
The school would be sited on a 22-hectare property near Taumarumaru reserve.
The schools announced on Thursday join Mastery Schools New Zealand - Arapaki, a Christchurch partner of a group of Australian schools that would open next year.
The Charter School Authorisation Board said there would be a further application round next year and those that were were unsuccessful in the first round could be reconsidered.
The government is spending $153 million over four years to revive the charter school model despite mixed evidence of their success.
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